Re-Usable Hydraulic Hose Fitting Tutorial

I have two upcoming projects that will require a lot of custom length hoses, so I though it would be a good time to give these a fair trial. I have always had hoses made locally at a fair price and in a timely manner, but I was always curious about these.

Here are two types of fittings, 1/4" NPT on the left, and a -6 JIC on the right.

Better view. 1/4" NPT on the left and -6 JIC on the right.

Here they are with the inner stems removed from the outside collar.

A die grinder with a cutoff wheel makes easy work of cutting the hose cleanly.

Here is the cut hose, a straight clean cut is important.

The outside collar is threaded onto the hose. These are left-hand threads.

Turn it till the inside bottoms out on the hose.

Now, mark the hose/collar, and back off the collar 1/2 turn or so to create a gap inside the fitting for the hose to expand into. This is a VERY IMPORTANT step. Failure to do this will cause the stem to break (Don't ask how I know!)

Hold the collar in a vise, lube the stem and inside the hose with some hydraulic oil and start turning the stem in. This was the hardest part-pushing and turning till the threads engaged. If it starts to get real tight, remove the stem, re-lube and try again.

Here is the completed fitting. The stem should NOT be tightened to the collar-but rather a small gap left.

After assembling the hose, be sure to flush it with a solvent (like mineral spirits) and compressed air to clean it out. You don't want the crap from cutting the hose in your hydraulic system.

Re: Re-Usable Hydraulic Hose Fitting Tutorial

Great tutorial I appreciate the thread. I have wondered about how well these work. Have you used them before? I thought they would be a better option overall more economical overall and the ability to use and all. I thought maybe they may have a problem with leaking.

Randall

1Timothy Chapter 2:
3 For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour;
4 Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth.
5 For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus. From: The HOLY BIBLE

Re: Re-Usable Hydraulic Hose Fitting Tutorial

Kenny,

Do you think this is a one time use of the screw on fittings, or can you screw the fitting back into the same hose. Would you have to use a fresh piece of hose every time you made up one of these units?

Re: Re-Usable Hydraulic Hose Fitting Tutorial

Originally Posted by dex3361

Great tutorial I appreciate the thread. I have wondered about how well these work. Have you used them before? I thought they would be a better option overall more economical overall and the ability to use and all. I thought maybe they may have a problem with leaking.

This will be my first time using them, but a few others here have and reported great results. There has just never been a dedicated post on how to install them so I thought I would do it.

Re: Re-Usable Hydraulic Hose Fitting Tutorial

Originally Posted by J_J

Kenny,

Do you think this is a one time use of the screw on fittings, or can you screw the fitting back into the same hose. Would you have to use a fresh piece of hose every time you made up one of these units?

The fitting itself is definitely reusable...I would guess they would want it screwed into fresh hose each time rather than where one was already but not 100% sure, there is very little info available about these.

Re: Re-Usable Hydraulic Hose Fitting Tutorial

I don't know, maybe they kinda grew on me. I have seen these on very old hoses so they definately work. If I didn't own a $5,000 hose crimper and over $100,000 in stock, I would use them too.

Manufacturers now call them "field attachable" for liability reasons but they are probably reusable until you wear them out. I can check my Weatherhead catalog, but I wouldn't use them on the same piece of hose twice. Maybe you can, I don't know.

Just a note for everyone else, they make different reusables for different hose types. (The SAE 100R #) Please, do not mix them up.

Knowing is not enough, you must apply.
Willing is not enough, you must do.
Bruce Lee